Daily Southtown (Sunday)

Woods makes his comeback

- By Doug Ferguson

ORLANDO, Fla. — Except for riding in a cart instead of walking, Tiger Woods at times looked just like he did a year ago in the PNC Championsh­ip on Saturday. Just not very often.

“Two good shots — three — came off exactly how I wanted,” Woods said.

The fact he could play alongside 12-year-old son Charlie was enough of a success considerin­g the injuries to his right leg from a car crash 10 months ago in Los Angeles. Woods has said doctors discussed amputation. For three months, he said he was immobilize­d in a makeshift hospital bed at his home in Florida. He and Charlie combined for a 62 in the scramble format, tied for fifth, three shots behind Stewart and Reagan Cink.

What he got out of this remarkable return had more to do with camaraderi­e than competitio­n.

“We had so much fun out there,” Woods.

One of those shots that stood out to Woods was on the par-5 third hole, where he hit 4-iron from 220 yards that drew slight back toward the flag and settled 8 feet behind the hole. That was shot he saw in his head and then in the air.

“That was just ridiculous,” Justin Thomas said. “I looked at him and as soon as he sat in the cart, he just kind of looked at me and smiled. And I knew exactly that’s the kind of shots that he hits when he’s healthy.”

Woods is healthy enough to play the PNC Championsh­ip, a popular year-end event for major champions and a family member. He’s not healthy enough to be a regular golfer.

“I don’t have endurance. I haven’t played,” said Woods, whose last competitio­n was the PNC Championsh­ip a year ago when he and his son finished seventh in a 20-team field.

“It’s tiring out there, so it was a slow day. But that’s something that I’m going to have to — if I want to compete out here at the tour level — I’m going to have to get the endurance back and hit thousands upon thousands of golf balls. Just takes time.”

Woods also mentioned the fairway metal he hit onto the green at the par-5 14th, and a 7-iron he smoked into the par-3 17th, unsure he could get there.

“It was one of my old shots,” Woods said.

Thomas would have picked another shot. He was determined Woods, who turns 46 at the end of the month and still walks gingerly from broken bones in his right leg and ankle, not hit a drive past him. That changed on 11.

“I hit it pretty good and as soon as his ball took that big bounce we looked at each other and I was like, ‘If it’s going to happen, it’s going to be this one because I think it just launched.’ And yeah, that was a shot to the ego,” Thomas said with a grin.

Woods showed the effects of his injuries in the way he walked, labored at times. The toughest walk belonged to Mike Thomas, the 62-year-old club profession­al with a bulging disk in his back that had been grimacing often.

“Definitely calling it a success both my dad and Tiger made it 18 holes,” Justin Thomas said.

For Woods, this was fun golf, not the real thing. For now, it was good enough.

“In terms of hitting shots, he’s not that far away,” Thomas said. “But in terms of being able to compete and walk 72 holes multiple weeks in a row, yeah, that’s a different story and he’s the only one who can answer that.”

 ?? SAM GREENWOOD/GETTY ?? Tiger Woods plays a shot during the first round of the PNC Championsh­ip on Saturday at the Ritz Carlton Golf Club Grande Lakes in Orlando, Florida.
SAM GREENWOOD/GETTY Tiger Woods plays a shot during the first round of the PNC Championsh­ip on Saturday at the Ritz Carlton Golf Club Grande Lakes in Orlando, Florida.

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